This folder contains various useful scripts for developers, mostly related to releasing new versions of Solr and testing those.
Python scripts require Python 3.6 or above. To install necessary python modules, please run:
pip3 install -r requirements.txt
Used to validate new release candidates (RC). The script downloads an RC from a URL or local folder, then runs a number of sanity checks on the artifacts, and then runs the full tests.
usage: smokeTestRelease.py [-h] [--tmp-dir PATH] [--not-signed] [--local-keys PATH] [--revision REVISION] [--version X.Y.Z(-ALPHA|-BETA)?] [--test-java12 JAVA12_HOME] [--download-only] url ... Utility to test a release. positional arguments: url Url pointing to release to test test_args Arguments to pass to ant for testing, e.g. -Dwhat=ever. optional arguments: -h, --help show this help message and exit --tmp-dir PATH Temporary directory to test inside, defaults to /tmp/smoke_solr_$version_$revision --not-signed Indicates the release is not signed --local-keys PATH Uses local KEYS file instead of fetching from https://archive.apache.org/dist/solr/KEYS --revision REVISION GIT revision number that release was built with, defaults to that in URL --version X.Y.Z(-ALPHA|-BETA)? Version of the release, defaults to that in URL --test-java12 JAVA12_HOME Path to Java12 home directory, to run tests with if specified --download-only Only perform download and sha hash check steps Example usage: python3 -u dev-tools/scripts/smokeTestRelease.py https://dist.apache.org/repos/dist/dev/solr/solr-9.0.1-RC2-revc7510a0...
The Release Wizard guides the Release Manager through the release process step by step, helping you to to run the right commands in the right order, generating e-mail templates with the correct texts, versions, paths etc, obeying the voting rules and much more. It also serves as a documentation of all the steps, with timestamps, preserving log files from each command etc, showing only the steps and commands required for a major/minor/bugfix release. It also lets you generate a full Asciidoc guide for the release. The wizard will execute many of the other tools in this folder.
usage: releaseWizard.py [-h] [--dry-run] [--init] Script to guide a RM through the whole release process optional arguments: -h, --help show this help message and exit --dry-run Do not execute any commands, but echo them instead. Display extra debug info --init Re-initialize root and version Go push that release!
usage: buildAndPushRelease.py [-h] [--no-prepare] [--local-keys PATH] [--push-local PATH] [--sign FINGERPRINT] [--sign-method-gradle] [--gpg-pass-noprompt] [--gpg-home PATH] [--rc-num NUM] [--root PATH] [--logfile PATH] [--dev-mode] Utility to build, push, and test a release. optional arguments: -h, --help show this help message and exit --no-prepare Use the already built release in the provided checkout --local-keys PATH Uses local KEYS file to validate presence of RM's gpg key --push-local PATH Push the release to the local path --sign FINGERPRINT Sign the release with the given gpg key. This must be the full GPG fingerprint, not just the last 8 characters. --sign-method-gradle Use Gradle built-in GPG signing instead of gpg command for signing artifacts. This may require --gpg-secring argument if your keychain cannot be resolved automatically. --gpg-pass-noprompt Do not prompt for gpg passphrase. For the default gnupg method, this means your gpg-agent needs a non-TTY pin-entry program. For gradle signing method, passphrase must be provided in gradle.properties or by env.var/sysprop. See ./gradlew helpPublishing for more info --gpg-home PATH Path to gpg home containing your secring.gpg Optional, will use $HOME/.gnupg/secring.gpg by default --rc-num NUM Release Candidate number. Default: 1 --root PATH Root of Git working tree for solr. Default: "." (the current directory) --logfile PATH Specify log file path (default /tmp/release.log) --dev-mode Enable development mode, which disables some strict checks Example usage for a Release Manager: python3 -u dev-tools/scripts/buildAndPushRelease.py --push-local /tmp/releases/6.0.1 --sign 3782CBB60147010B330523DD26FBCC7836BF353A --rc-num 1
usage: addVersion.py [-h] [-l LUCENE_VERSION] version Add a new version to CHANGES, to Version.java, build.gradle and solrconfig.xml files positional arguments: version New Solr version optional arguments: -h, --help show this help message and exit -l LUCENE_VERSION Optional lucene version. By default will read versions.props
Pulls out all JIRAs mentioned at the beginning of bullet items under the given version in the given CHANGES.txt file and prints a regular expression that will match all of them
usage: releasedJirasRegex.py [-h] version changes Prints a regex matching JIRAs fixed in the given version by parsing the given CHANGES.txt file positional arguments: version Version of the form X.Y.Z changes CHANGES.txt file to parse optional arguments: -h, --help show this help message and exit
usage: reproduceJenkinsFailures.py [-h] [--no-git] [--iters N] URL Must be run from a Solr git workspace. Downloads the Jenkins log pointed to by the given URL, parses it for Git revision and failed Solr tests, checks out the Git revision in the local workspace, groups the failed tests by module, then runs 'ant test -Dtest.dups=%d -Dtests.class="*.test1[|*.test2[...]]" ...' in each module of interest, failing at the end if any of the runs fails. To control the maximum number of concurrent JVMs used for each module's test run, set 'tests.jvms', e.g. in ~/lucene.build.properties positional arguments: URL Points to the Jenkins log to parse optional arguments: -h, --help show this help message and exit --no-git Do not run "git" at all --iters N Number of iterations per test suite (default: 5)
usage: githubPRs.py [-h] [--json] [--token TOKEN] Find open Pull Requests that need attention optional arguments: -h, --help show this help message and exit --json Output as json --token TOKEN Github access token in case you query too often anonymously
Scaffold a new module and include it into the build. It will set up the folders and all for you, so the only thing you need to do is add classes, tests and test-data.
usage: scaffoldNewModule.py [-h] name full_name description Scaffold new module into solr/modules/<name> positional arguments: name code-name/id, e.g. my-module full_name Readable name, e.g. "My Module" description Short description for docs optional arguments: -h, --help show this help message and exit Example: ./scaffoldNewModule.py foo "My Module" "Very Useful module here"
TBD
Usage: dev-tools/scripts/cherrypick.sh [<options>] <commit-hash> [<commit-hash>...] -b <branch> Sets the branch(es) to cherry-pick to, typically branch_Nx or branch_x_y -s Skips precommit test. WARNING: Always run precommit for code- and doc changes -t Run the full test suite during check, not only precommit -n Skips git pull of target branch. Useful if you are without internet access -a Enters automated mode. Aborts cherry-pick and exits on error -r <remote> Specify remote to push to. Defaults to 'origin' -p Push to remote. Only done if both cherry-pick and tests succeeded WARNING: Never push changes to a remote branch before a thorough local test Simple script for aiding in back-porting one or more (trivial) commits to other branches. On merge conflict the script will run 'git mergetool'. See 'git mergetool --help' for help on configuring your favourite merge tool. Check out Sublime Merge (smerge). Example: # Backport two commits to both stable and release branches dev-tools/scripts/cherrypick.sh -b branch_9x -b branch_9_0 deadbeef0000 cafebabe1111